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natwest unarranged overdraft charges

Hi

I have held a current account with Natwest for approx 10 years and have an overdraft limit of £400, i have always used the account for everyday accounts i.e wages, mortgage payments, D/D etc. until 3-4 years ago when i started my own business therefore opened business account and also opened joint account with my wife for everyday accounts.

i had still used the current account until July 2011 when i had left the account at £390 overdrawn with no D/D or anything set to come out as things were tight moneywise and i needed the money at the time, however until jan 2012 i had not really looked at statements / letters regarding the account.

After checking the account online i discovered that Natwest has charged me £180 per month in november & december running the account to approx £800 overdrawn.

Re: natwest unarranged overdraft charges

Hi

There are a number of issues here. Start off by reading this article http://www.consumeractiongroup.co.uk...-RBS-last-year as some of the issues may apply to you.
I have just realised that you will agreed overdraft limit is £400. It therefore makes no sense that they are levying charges against you unless for some reason other you have gone over the £400. Have you got statements? Can you see anything which has triggered the charges?

Have they gone ahead and withdrawn your overdraft altogether?.

You say that you have not looked at the letters and statements. Have you got them? Or have you thrown them away?

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Re: natwest unarranged overdraft charges

Hi

Thanks for the quick reply, i do have statements and it appears that the bank has triggered originally by adding interest please see below copied from statement, you can see the dates, withdrawal amounts followed by balance at that time

Warning: I use dictation software. Beware of homophones!Have you read our dealing with customer services guide? Please don't pm me about specific questions unless you have posted and it has not been dealt with or unless the matter is confidential. All attribution rights and moral rights in my copyright work are assertedAdvice & opinions of BankFodder, The Consumer Action Group and The Bank Action Group are offered informally & without liability. Use your own judgment. Seek advice of a qualified insured professional if you have any doubts.

Re: natwest unarranged overdraft charges

OTR was me taking money to another account to meet bill payments in another account

Yes it was below limit until 2nd sep when added interest took it over the limit

The charges are
02/11/11 - £60 = not sure from statement it just says unarranged O/D fee
02/12/11 - £180 = £6 a day
03/01/12 = £186 = £6 a day

I have just checked but it looks like i have got rid of all statements but can get them resent online i think

Like i said before i have had the account for approx ten years, never really had any financial problems with the bank and have a business account, a joint account, a personal loan and a credit card all with Natwest so seems a bit harsh that they have stuck on all these charges

i have enough money to put the account back to within the overdraft limit immediately so should i do this???

Re: natwest unarranged overdraft charges

i have enough money to put the account back to within the overdraft limit immediately so should i do this???

It's up to you. I'm all for starting off with a clean slate so that I have more leverage to attack them.

My instinct would be to put together a case for saying that they are acting unfairly to you.
It is clear that you owe some of the money so you need to pay that off at least.
If you don't clear the account and you start to attack them, then they will start retaliating and demanding full repayment, account closure, DCA, default etc etc.

I like to keep my problems down to a minimum so that the issues are clear. you present a smaller target if you like.

The solution I owujld suggest is to make out a case for unfairness under BCOBS and then to threaten to sue and give them very short timescales to react to you.
You need to decide if you are prepared to go down this route.
If you clear the account so that the level of the reclaim is stable then there is no danger of it getting out of hand and eventually growing to a proportion where the amount might be too large for the small claims limit.
You have to understand also that a BCOBS action would be a learning curve because it hasn't be tried before on charges. You stand to lose your claim fee if you lose. On the other hand, I can't see that they will give you back your charges any other way.
They might hand you back a few charges as a gesture of goodwill but that's all. You could try the fos but it will take up to two years and probably not succeed.

If you wanted to try the court route then we would help you as closely as we can.

Warning: I use dictation software. Beware of homophones!Have you read our dealing with customer services guide? Please don't pm me about specific questions unless you have posted and it has not been dealt with or unless the matter is confidential. All attribution rights and moral rights in my copyright work are assertedAdvice & opinions of BankFodder, The Consumer Action Group and The Bank Action Group are offered informally & without liability. Use your own judgment. Seek advice of a qualified insured professional if you have any doubts.

Warning: I use dictation software. Beware of homophones!Have you read our dealing with customer services guide? Please don't pm me about specific questions unless you have posted and it has not been dealt with or unless the matter is confidential. All attribution rights and moral rights in my copyright work are assertedAdvice & opinions of BankFodder, The Consumer Action Group and The Bank Action Group are offered informally & without liability. Use your own judgment. Seek advice of a qualified insured professional if you have any doubts.

Re: natwest unarranged overdraft charges

Hi Gez

Yes is the answer

Also another interesting issue i found is that as soon as a business account is opened then all correspondence for any of my Natwest accounts is carried out through my business manager at the bank, which means i cannot be dis associated / seperated from personal / business accounts, which maybe not a bad thing i suppose unless you have a useless business account manager !!!! say no more !!!!

I am finding it hard to understand why my bank did not freeze my account and stop all outgoings, when they can see from transactions that i am not using the account, instead it is them that are using my account to pay there own interest/charges that they are charging to my account for there own withdrawals.

As you have highlighted because i have several accounts then the logical thing to do would be to inform me that they need to take the money to pay off a spiralling cost unless i address this, which brings me back to my totally brilliant business account manager that does have my phone number / email address on record !!!!!

Re: natwest unarranged overdraft charges

Another question (refer to the RBS claims link which I posted for you) - did they treat the charges as unauthorised? This means, were the charges themselves subject to an elevated rate of interest because they were considered to be unauthorised borrowing? - to they have a within limit interest rate and an over-limit rate?

Warning: I use dictation software. Beware of homophones!Have you read our dealing with customer services guide? Please don't pm me about specific questions unless you have posted and it has not been dealt with or unless the matter is confidential. All attribution rights and moral rights in my copyright work are assertedAdvice & opinions of BankFodder, The Consumer Action Group and The Bank Action Group are offered informally & without liability. Use your own judgment. Seek advice of a qualified insured professional if you have any doubts.

Re: natwest unarranged overdraft charges

Originally Posted by BankFodder

Another question (refer to the RBS claims link which I posted for you) - did they treat the charges as unauthorised? This means, were the charges themselves subject to an elevated rate of interest because they were considered to be unauthorised borrowing? - to they have a within limit interest rate and an over-limit rate?

i'm not sure as it doesnt really give too much info online and to be honest i dont quite understand this !!

I have just paid £500 into the account so balance is -£353.59 and it looks like the overdraft is still available as it now says £46.41 is available, i will pay more off in the week to get the account back to £0

i am obviously not happy to pay these bank charges as you can imagine. so further advice would be appreciated in relation to getting back my money

Re: natwest unarranged overdraft charges

OK, as I have suggested, I expect that the only chance of getting the charges back would be by court action. It would have to be on the basis that the charges were unfair in their level or the way in which they had been levied.

Second thing is that if you start to claim back the charges aggressively, there is a risk of retaliation by the bank. Retaliation would be unlawful but the bank might do it anyway. You need to be in a position where if the bank decide to get back at you, it won't hurt you.

This means that you should be ready to pay off the rest of the OD if they call it in all of a sudden. You should also have a parachute account ready so that you have somewhere else to go in case they start closing your account.

You can start off trying to do thing reasonably and peacefully by approaching the bank and asking them to apply some discretion and return the charges t you because you are a long-standing customer who has run their account well. This may get you a few of the charges back - but it would be amazing if it got you all of them back.

You could decide to make a complaint to the fos about the charges on the basis that they were unfair and that the bank was ignoring its statutory duty under BCOBS - these arguments are basically the same one which you would use in a court case.
The FOS route will be trouble free for you. It won't cost you anything and there is no risk in the event that you lose. On the other hand, it will take a long time. You won't really know what is going on and finally the chances are that the FOS will not uphold your complaint. The FOS don't seem to be very enthusiastic regulators.
Your last option wuld be to attack the bank directly by threatening them with a court action on the basis that their charges are unfair and that therefore they are in breach of statutory duty. This will rile the bank and there is a good chance that they will try to cause you problems - although as you are now within limits, it will be harder for them to do.

You need to find out if the rate of interest paid on an agreed overdraft is less than the rate which is paid on an unagreed overdraft.

Your unfairness arguments would be substantially those contained in the RBS letter which I have linked you - although we would tweak it to suit your situation.

As long as the case remained on the small claims Track - which is very likely, your only risk would be your claim fee.

You would have to do the case yourself, go to court and represent yourself and understand the arguments well enough to explain them to the judge.

If you won then you would get your claim fee back as well as your money.
You would find the court route more stressful but more exciting than the FOS

Warning: I use dictation software. Beware of homophones!Have you read our dealing with customer services guide? Please don't pm me about specific questions unless you have posted and it has not been dealt with or unless the matter is confidential. All attribution rights and moral rights in my copyright work are assertedAdvice & opinions of BankFodder, The Consumer Action Group and The Bank Action Group are offered informally & without liability. Use your own judgment. Seek advice of a qualified insured professional if you have any doubts.

Re: natwest unarranged overdraft charges

One thing that keeps rattling around in my head............ if you consent to the overdraft facility, are you not also implicit [knowingly or not] in your ack to right of set-off

Would any conditions effective on the facility not already be subordinate to the parties most cost effective lawful remedy? Anything else would seem to be an abuse of the contract itself in promoting maximum benefit for the bank.

Re: natwest unarranged overdraft charges

Because it is a right to set-off it doesn't need any consent. It's a right.

I don't think that the most cost effective lawful remedy comes in to it. But certainly I think that the COBS principles require that the bank takes its customers interests when making decisions and to me that means that where there is a conflict of interest coming from an ambiguity or loophole etc then the bank must resolve the conflict in the interests of the customer.

Of course none of this is tested because COBS and BCOBS are not widely known about by consumers and certainly almost unused by them. It all needs to testing in the courts - but frankly I htink that the language is fairly clear

Warning: I use dictation software. Beware of homophones!Have you read our dealing with customer services guide? Please don't pm me about specific questions unless you have posted and it has not been dealt with or unless the matter is confidential. All attribution rights and moral rights in my copyright work are assertedAdvice & opinions of BankFodder, The Consumer Action Group and The Bank Action Group are offered informally & without liability. Use your own judgment. Seek advice of a qualified insured professional if you have any doubts.

Re: natwest unarranged overdraft charges

Hi Guys

Well the script gets better, allow me to explain...

So in January i spoke to my Business manager who said that she was unable to and could not take off the charges that had accumulated on the account, however would waiver the charge for january if i made a payment and started to clear the debt.

As above i made a payment of £500 on 13/01/12, however it took me to the start of Feb before i could attempt to try to pay off the agreed overdraft limit, although when i logged in to online banking the charges for January had been added to the account

After phone calls, text messages, visits to the branch trying to get hold of my business manager since February, i have finally spoken to her today and although she didn't have a choice to avoid my call as i was transferred through to her by customer services, she denies that she had agreed to waiving the charges in January.
She also had a very short temper with me and was totally unprofessional and rude, i of course was polite although inquisitive to why she had not responded to my attempts of contacting her, for which she replied "THAT IS NONE OF YOUR BUSINESS, if you want to make a complaint you need to put it in writing" - Charming !!!!!!!!!!!

So i had been waiting to speak to her to resolve the issues over the January charge, i have received a letter from Natwest saying that they have been advised by my business manager to use their legal right of set off to clear the outstanding debt of -£958.57, which would be collected from my business account if funds are available.
I called the number and have lodged a complaint so i am now waiting for a response in writing, the operator asked me what outcome i would expect, so i told them i would like all of the charges to be waivered and for the account to be closed.

You will notice that a cheque was paid into the account by a member of staff at the branch, this was supposed to be paid into my business account not this account which is a personal current account, not sure how that happened as my wife had taken the cheque into the branch, however the customer did cancel the cheque and it was repaid into my business account

Re: natwest unarranged overdraft charges

Warning: I use dictation software. Beware of homophones!Have you read our dealing with customer services guide? Please don't pm me about specific questions unless you have posted and it has not been dealt with or unless the matter is confidential. All attribution rights and moral rights in my copyright work are assertedAdvice & opinions of BankFodder, The Consumer Action Group and The Bank Action Group are offered informally & without liability. Use your own judgment. Seek advice of a qualified insured professional if you have any doubts.

Re: natwest unarranged overdraft charges

Duncan,

I know it's a while ago now, but would you be prepared to share some of the arguments you used in your successful letter to the bank? I discovered this thread because I am currently in a very similar situation to the one you dealt with - interest charged on an infrequently used account taking my overdraft past it's arranged limit and then leading to charge upon charge which eventually totaled over 500 pounds.
I'm trying to get this money refunded and it would be a great help to me, and many others who have found themselves in this situation, if I could see examples of what has worked in the past.